


It is also now possible to add control points to the curves in MasterGrade with a colour picker, and to enable or disable a menu with new LED buttons.

It automatically discards ‘bad data’ like people, vehicles and other moving objects that would otherwise have to be manually removed from a standard scene-based solve.Īccording to Autodesk, the new tracker “provides artists with a one-click solve, delivering … results with over 5,000 points in a fraction of the time it would take using traditional workflows.”Īs well as the camera data, the node generates point cloud data and a Z-depth map that can be used to position 3D objects accurately in background footage.Ĭhanges to colour grading workflow include a new Color Management matchbox node, enabling artists to import LUTs or colour transforms directly inside Flame’s Action and Image toolsets. New machine-learning-based Camera Analysis node for camera trackingĪutodesk has been steadily rolling out new AI-trained features in Flame ever since Flame 2020, initially for keying footage, or for extracting normal and depth maps from it.įlame 2022 brings machine learning to Flame’s core toolset, in the shape of the Camera Analysis node: a new 3D tracking system. The other products in the Flame family – the two cut-down editions of Flame, Flame Assist and Flare, and colour grading tool Lustre – have also been updated. The update also extends Flame’s colour grading toolset, and adds support for the NDI protocol, making it easier to carry out client review sessions remotely. Autodesk has released Flame 2022, the next update to its compositing, finishing and effects software, adding a new machine-learning-based camera tracking system.
